Barbara Jackson, the wife of a former Drug Enforcement Administration agent, pleaded guilty Monday in U.S. District Court to a charge of failing to file an income tax return in 1987. The plea was entered as part of a plea-bargain agreement linked to the agency's corruption scandal.

Sean Jackson vividly remembers the moment that shaped his basketball career, starting him on the road from California to UC Irvine. It was the first day. The first class. The first step as a freshman at Berkeley. "I was just coming out of class and there was an assistant coach waiting for me and another player," Jackson said. "He said, 'You have to come with me. We're having a press conference.'

Barbara Jackson, who is on the June ballot for the Democratic Party's nomination in the 38th Congressional District, says she hopes that her opponents lose--but she won't go so far as to say that she would like to win. Jackson, an abortion-rights activist from Buena Park, was a last-minute entry in the race for the seat held by conservative Rep. Robert K.

The wife of a former Drug Enforcement Administration agent, Barbara Jackson, pleaded guilty Monday in federal court in Los Angeles to failure to file her 1987 income tax return as part of a plea-bargain agreement linked to the agency's corruption scandal. Jackson, 42, of Claremont is the wife of former DEA agent John Jackson, 41, who pleaded guilty last month to trafficking in drugs stolen from the agency's evidence vault in Los Angeles.

The wife of a former Drug Enforcement Administration agent, Barbara Jackson, pleaded guilty Monday in federal court in Los Angeles to failure to file her 1987 income tax return as part of a plea-bargain agreement linked to the agency's corruption scandal. Jackson, 42, of Claremont is the wife of former DEA agent John Jackson, 41, who pleaded guilty last month to trafficking in drugs stolen from the agency's evidence vault in Los Angeles.

Breaking her silence on Tuesday's election results, Democratic congressional nominee Barbara Jackson said Friday she will not campaign against Rep. Robert K. Dornan and she does not consider herself a candidate in the race. Just days after she entered the race in March, Jackson announced that she was withdrawing from the contest and would not campaign against her opponent in the Democratic primary, Art Hoffmann, a supporter of political extremist Lyndon LaRouche.

A Democratic candidate who vowed not to run in November if nominated appeared headed for victory over a supporter of a political extremist in the 38th Congressional District primary election Tuesday. The apparent win by "non-candidate" Barbara Jackson of Buena Park, a Planned Parenthood official whose withdrawal from the race came too late for her name to be dropped from the ballot, virtually assures another term for Rep. Robert K.

Los Angeles radio station KFI-AM, which has featured Rep. Robert K. Dornan (R-Garden Grove) filling in for nationally syndicated talk-show host Rush Limbaugh this week, blacked out Dornan's show Friday. A KFI spokesman said the station decided to air alternate programming because of unanswered questions about whether Barbara Jackson, Dornan's Democratic opponent in the Nov. 6 election, might have the right to demand equal time on the air.

Barbara Jackson, the wife of a former Drug Enforcement Administration agent, pleaded guilty Monday in U.S. District Court to a charge of failing to file an income tax return in 1987. The plea was entered as part of a plea-bargain agreement linked to the agency's corruption scandal.

Los Angeles radio station KFI-AM, which has featured Rep. Robert K. Dornan (R-Garden Grove) filling in for nationally syndicated talk-show host Rush Limbaugh this week, blacked out Dornan's show Friday. A KFI spokesman said the station decided to air alternate programming because of unanswered questions about whether Barbara Jackson, Dornan's Democratic opponent in the Nov. 6 election, might have the right to demand equal time on the air.

Breaking her silence on Tuesday's election results, Democratic congressional nominee Barbara Jackson said Friday she will not campaign against Rep. Robert K. Dornan and she does not consider herself a candidate in the race. Just days after she entered the race in March, Jackson announced that she was withdrawing from the contest and would not campaign against her opponent in the Democratic primary, Art Hoffmann, a supporter of political extremist Lyndon LaRouche.

A Democratic candidate who vowed not to run in November if nominated appeared headed for victory over a supporter of a political extremist in the 38th Congressional District primary election Tuesday. The apparent win by "non-candidate" Barbara Jackson of Buena Park, a Planned Parenthood official whose withdrawal from the race came too late for her name to be dropped from the ballot, virtually assures another term for Rep. Robert K.

The scuttled campaign of celebrity candidate Ron Kovic has left Orange County Democrats with a bleak and increasingly familiar outlook in the 1990 election season. As the deadline for candidates to file for office passed Friday, Republicans were gleeful about their chances to retain a lock on the county's state and federal legislative offices.

Sean Jackson vividly remembers the moment that shaped his basketball career, starting him on the road from California to UC Irvine. It was the first day. The first class. The first step as a freshman at Berkeley. "I was just coming out of class and there was an assistant coach waiting for me and another player," Jackson said. "He said, 'You have to come with me. We're having a press conference.'

Barbara Jackson, who is on the June ballot for the Democratic Party's nomination in the 38th Congressional District, says she hopes that her opponents lose--but she won't go so far as to say that she would like to win. Jackson, an abortion-rights activist from Buena Park, was a last-minute entry in the race for the seat held by conservative Rep. Robert K.